IoT is creating a bit of a feeding-frenzy in the low power wireless market. No sooner do we have the latest version of the ZigBee standard tuned for IoT device development, then we availability of the Weightless-P wireless standard for wide area IoT links. These are not competing standard. ZigBee operates in the 2.4GHz and Weightless-P is a12.5kHz narrowband radio ...
Internet of Things
Electronics related to the Internet of Things (IoT), and all its associated sensors, comms, security, and embedded systems.
ARM has re-invented itself as a systems company
ARM says it is now a systems company. Low-powered processor developer, ARM has been steadily building a broader range of silicon IP and the software that runs on it. Jim Wallace, director of system and software, ARM told Electronics Weekly, that the company has reached a point where it can be called a systems company and “no longer only a supplier of ...
Energy harvesting moves to 2.4GHz for IoT designs
The latest version of the ZigBee low power radio standard will include for the first time support for energy harvesting as defined by the EnOcean Alliance. ZigBee 3.0 will be an open specification that is intended to support energy harvesting wireless communications operating in the 2.4GHz for the first time. “We are very excited that the EnOcean Alliance is bringing its ...
Chip supplier makes finished embedded product move
Atmel has formed a partnership with French embedded systems design house and manufacturer Lacroix Electronics. The aim seems to be to design its microcontrollers and other ICs into embedded systems products for industrial applications and radio communications. As a result the semiconductor company will be able to offer complete system products and not only ICs. Many semiconductor suppliers are looking ...
Silicon Labs CEO puts IoT opportunity in perspective
The term “internet of things” dates back to 1999 when the British sensor researcher Kevin Ashton coined the catchphrase. Ashton’s bold predictions for the IoT were prescient, writes Tyson Tuttle, CEO, Silicon Labs As the next evolution of computing, the IoT adds sensing, processing and connectivity to everyday “things” such as thermostats, locks, lights and sensor nodes. In recent years, ...
Picture Gallery: IoT Design conference, London 2015
The IoT Design conference and exhibition took place in London last week, organised by Electronics Weekly. We hope everyone who attended found the event useful and informative Topics covered ranged from security, disruptive semiconductor technologies, and Bluetooth to over the air software upgrades, and the Visible Things evaluation and development platform. As a record of the event please see our ...
ARM has plan to make $1 Cortex-M processors secure
ARM will add deeply embedded in-the-chip security to its volume Cortex-M series microcontrollers next year. The next generation Cortex-M series microcontroller, likely to be the Cortex-M5, will incorporate a version of ARM’s TrustZone security technology, which creates highly secure processing elements within the chip. TrustZone creates two modes of operation, one for standard operating systems, the other for the trusted ...
IoT will be 1,000 markets
The IoT will not be a single market but a 1,000 sub-markets all with their own individual technology and skills requirements. The IoT Design Conference and Exhibition in London this week was told that taking advantage of the enormous potential of the IoT market will not be straight‑forward. John Jones from Avnet Memec-Silica, said at the conference in London: “If ...
Absolute internet security does not exist, says Hugo Fiennes
Internet-connected devices may never have absolute security when under attack by hackers. Software and hardware security specialist told the IoT Design Conference in London this week that retrofitting security to systems which may already have been hacked was not an option. Security must be designed from the very start of a new project and that means putting features such as ...
A million IoT device designers by 2020, says ARM director
There could be more than a million new embedded IoT device developers in the next five years and they will be relying on new types of design tools which will be easier to use. This was the startling message from the IoT Design Conference and exhibition, which was organised by Electronics Weekly in London this week. With internet-connected devices creating ...